



Chapter 2: Penny
The first breath outside the studio always feels like a small kind of freedom. The airâs warmer than itâs been in months, the sharpness of winter finally fading into something that smells like dirt and early grass. I roll my shoulders as I walk, wincing when the right one catches. Too many hours under Madame Lorettoâs glare.
Mila falls in beside me, pulling her sweatshirt tighter around her waist. âI donât know about you,â she says, âbut I feel like I just got hit by a truck made of ballet shoes.â
I huff a laugh. âYou and me both.â
âMy quads are actively planning their escape.â
âMy soul already left my body in the second round of adagios.â
Mila groans. âIâm glad Iâm not trying for the Spring Gala. Iâd actually have to care.â
I glance over at her. âI still donât get it. You should try out.â
She gives me a lookâdry, unbothered. âDid you see me today? I almost wiped out during barre. And I wasnât even moving.â
âYou werenât that bad.â
âI was. Itâs okay. Iâve made peace with being average.â
I slow my pace a little, adjusting my bag strap. âYouâre not average. Youâre solid. You just donât push yourself.â
âI know,â she says, not offended. âThatâs why it works. No pressure, no breakdowns.â
I massage my shoulder again, letting the silence settle between us for a second.
Mila glances at me. âYou, though. Even when you were messing up earlier? You were still better than the rest of us.â
I shake my head. âThatâs generous.â
âItâs not. You justâmove differently. You make the floor look like it belongs to you.â
I donât know what to say to that. Compliments always land strange. Too soft. Like I donât know what to do with them once theyâre in my hands.
I shrug. âMadame didnât think so.â
âShe did by the end.â
âOnly after emotionally dismantling me in front of the entire room.â
Mila tilts her head, thoughtful. âSheâs rough. But she only does that with people she thinks might actually have a shot.â
I glance up at the sky. Itâs that pale, late-afternoon shade of blue, still cool at the edges. The sidewalks are patchy with melted snow and uneven sunshine, but it smells like spring is fighting its way in. Everythingâs still uglyâbut softer. Lighter.
We stop at the curb. The walk sign blinks red.
âI was off today,â I say, quietly. âI could feel it.â
âBecause of Tyler?â
I pause. âYeah.â
âYou want to talk about it?â
âHe forgot to pick me up. Again. After class.â
She exhales, long and slow. âDid he apologize?â
âSaid he was helping someone study.â
Mila raises an eyebrow but doesnât say anything.
âItâs not like I expect him to rearrange his life,â I add, even though I donât owe her an explanation.
âNo,â she says. âBut maybe remembering yours would be nice.â
We cross the street. I donât look at her.
âHe means well,â I say after a moment. âHeâs just... scattered.â
âHeâs not in the room with you when youâre bleeding into your shoes, Pen. He doesnât know what it takes.â
âI donât need him to understand ballet.â
âI know. But maybe you need him to understand you.â
I donât answer. The silence stretches out again as we walk past the coffee shop and the florist whose windows are still full of fake snow. I exhale, slow and steady, trying to shake off the weight pressing behind my ribs.
âI nailed it, though,â I say eventually.
Mila looks over. âYou did.â
âThat last run-through felt... right. For the first time in a while.â
âI could tell. You looked like yourself again.â
The corner bakery is just ahead, and Mila points toward it. âCome on. We earned something soft and full of carbs.â
The smell hits us before the door opensâvanilla, sugar, butter. Warmth.
We order without thinking. She gets her usual cinnamon roll. I grab the chocolate cupcake with the thick frosting swirl. It looks ridiculous. I want it anyway.
We sit by the window, quiet again. People move past outsideârushed, distracted, loud. Itâs all so far away in here.
âI donât know whatâs wrong with me,â I say finally, low enough that only Mila can hear.
She doesnât flinch. âYouâre not broken.â
âI just feel... like Iâm trying to stay on top of something that keeps shifting under my feet.â
âYouâre exhausted.â
âEveryoneâs exhausted.â
âYeah,â she says. âBut not everyoneâs trying to carry the weight of perfection at the same time.â
I break off a piece of cupcake and roll it between my fingers. âI feel like if I let it go for even a second, Iâll fall behind.â
âYou wonât.â
âHow do you know?â
She looks at me like itâs obvious. âBecause youâre already ahead.â
That silences me for a minute.
We finish our pastries slowly. Thereâs no rush. Just soreness and sugar and the strange relief of having survived another class, another day.
When we finally head back out, the sunâs dipped lower, the gold turning cooler, but it still feels warmer than it has in weeks. I breathe it in like something earned.
My body aches in every direction. My shoulder throbs. My thighs are already threatening tomorrowâs pain. But I walk steady.
Today, I landed it.
And maybe thatâs enough.
Mila splits off toward her block with a sleepy wave, muttering something about ramen and a bath and how if she doesnât text me later, I should assume sheâs been swallowed whole by her mattress. I smile as I keep walking.
I pull out my phone for the first time since before class and instantly get hit with a flood of notifications.
Twelve texts from Tyler.
Ty (4:52 PM): Iâm so sorry
Ty (4:54 PM): I literally suck
Ty (4:55 PM): I completely spacedâZoe needed help with some chem thing and it just
Ty (4:55 PM): Happened
Ty (5:00 PM): Iâm an idiot
Ty (5:03 PM): Please let me make it up to you
Ty (5:04 PM): Youâre probably in class now
Ty (5:08 PM): I swear Iâll never forget again
Ty (5:09 PM): Please donât hate me
Ty (5:15 PM): I love you
Ty (5:15 PM): So much
I stop walking. My heart does this stupid soft flip in my chest, and I press my fingers lightly to the screen. He forgot. Yeah. But he cares. He always does. Even when he messes up.
Tylerâs never been perfect, but heâs never made me feel anything less than loved.
And honestly? I don't care that I had to run today. Iâd still take this over anyone else.
When I turn the corner onto my street, I freeze.
Heâs sitting on the porch.
My porch.
His hoodie is pulled low over his eyes, and thereâs a paper bag in his lap. Heâs scrolling through his phone, probably checking for the hundredth time if Iâve texted back yet.
I smile before I can stop myself.
âHey,â I say.
His head jerks up fast, and he practically jumps to his feet. âPen.â
He rushes toward me, holding the bag in one hand, his face wrecked with apology. âIâm so sorry. I didnât mean toâI got caught up helping Zoe and totally lost track and then when I looked at the time IâGod, I felt sick.â
âTyââ
âI shouldâve been there. I had it on my calendar. I even set a reminder and then ignored it like a complete idiotââ
I laugh and wrap my arms around his waist, hugging him tight. âTy. Itâs okay.â
He pulls back just enough to look at me. âAre you sure?â
âYeah. Itâs okay. Youâre here now.â
He holds out the bag. âI got you that sandwich you like. The weird healthy one? With the avocado and... sprouts or whatever?â
I peek inside. Itâs definitely not the one I wouldâve picked, but he remembered I liked it once, a long time ago. Itâs sweet. Itâs him.
âThis is perfect,â I say.
He exhales like I just handed him a second chance, then kisses meâquick, soft, familiar.
âText me when you wake up?â he says.
âOf course.â
He squeezes my hand once before heading down the steps. I watch him walk down the street and into his houseâjust three doors down from mine.
I hold the sandwich to my chest and grin.
Because I love him.
And I donât need anything else.